ASSIGNMENT 2
DUE DATE: 8 APRIL 2026
, LML4807 ASSIGNMENT 2 2026
DUE 8 APRIL 2026
Hennie is a 25-year-old, Afrikaans-speaking farm owner from the Free State. He does
not fully understand English and wants to purchase a new bakkie to enable him to
travel to work and also load farming material. .....
a) The different types of reckless credit agreements provided by the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
The NCA identifies two distinct types of reckless credit, as outlined in section 80. These
types are fundamental to understanding the obligations of a credit provider before
concluding a credit agreement with a consumer.¹
Failure to Conduct an Assessment (Section 80(1)(a)): A credit agreement is reckless
if, at the time it was entered into, the credit provider failed to conduct an assessment as
required by section 81(2) of the NCA.² This is the case irrespective of what the outcome
of such an assessment might have been.³ This type focuses on the credit provider's
procedural failure to follow the mandatory pre-agreement steps, regardless of the
consumer's financial health or understanding.⁴
Ignoring a Negative Assessment Outcome (Section 80(1)(b)): A credit agreement is
reckless if the credit provider, having conducted the required assessment under section
81(2), nonetheless entered into the credit agreement despite the fact that the
preponderance of information available to them indicated one of two things:⁵
¹ Study Guide for LML4807 (Banking and Usage Law), University of South Africa, 2025, p. 172.
² Section 80(1)(a) of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005.
³ CM Van Heerden & A Boraine, "The money or the box: Perspectives on reckless credit in terms of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005", De Jure, Vol. 44 No. 2, 2011, p. 395.
⁴ Van Heerden & Boraine, De Jure, 2011, p. 395.
⁵ Section 80(1)(b) of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005.